Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

pagefile.sys on other partition (and possibly on other disk) ...

2 views
Skip to first unread message

Vladimir Stefanovic

unread,
Mar 25, 2006, 1:30:18 PM3/25/06
to
Hi,

Is there any real benefit of making another partition for
storing pagefile.sys (swap file)?

Also, what about making such partition on another HD?

Is making a fixed size swap, of 4GB for example, better
than "Let Windows to choose..." ?


--
Best Regards,
Vladimir Stefanovic


Ken Blake, MVP

unread,
Mar 25, 2006, 4:43:23 PM3/25/06
to
Vladimir Stefanovic wrote:

> Is there any real benefit of making another partition for
> storing pagefile.sys (swap file)?


No, it's not only not a benefit, it's a detriment.What it does is move the
page file to a location on the hard drive distant from the other
frequently-used data on the drive. The result is that every time Windows
needs to use the page file, the time to get to it and back from it is
increased.


> Also, what about making such partition on another HD?


Putting the page file on a second *physical* drive is a good idea, since it
decreases head movement, but not to a second partition on a single drive. A
good rule of thumb is that the page file should be on the most-used
partition of the least-used physical drive. For almost everyone with a
single drive, that's C:.

If you have enough RAM, the penalty formoving the page file to a second
partition may be slight, since you won't use the page file much, but it
won't help you.

Also, the other problem with a separate partition like this is that you run
the risk of making it too small, in which case programs will fail for lack
of virtual memory, or too large, which is wasteful of disk space. If you
leave it on C:, it can expand or contract as needed.


> Is making a fixed size swap, of 4GB for example, better
> than "Let Windows to choose..." ?


No. 4GB is *way* more than almost anyone needs.

--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
Please reply to the newsgroup


Stan Brown

unread,
Mar 25, 2006, 6:53:33 PM3/25/06
to
Sat, 25 Mar 2006 14:30:18 +0100 from Vladimir Stefanovic
<anti...@po.sbb.co.yu>:

> Is there any real benefit of making another partition for
> storing pagefile.sys (swap file)?

No.

> Also, what about making such partition on another HD?

Yes.



> Is making a fixed size swap, of 4GB for example, better
> than "Let Windows to choose..." ?

Almost never.


For details, read Alex Nichols' excellent article at
<http://www.aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm>.

--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA
http://OakRoadSystems.com/

Vladimir Stefanovic

unread,
Mar 25, 2006, 7:52:21 PM3/25/06
to
Thank you for the detailed explanation.

You answers were very useful, indeed.

Ken Blake, MVP

unread,
Mar 25, 2006, 8:53:13 PM3/25/06
to
Vladimir Stefanovic wrote:

> Thank you for the detailed explanation.
>
> You answers were very useful, indeed.


If you mean me, you're welcome. But for the future, may I ask you to please
quote the message you'ree responding to, as I did above. Without a quote
it's very difficult to be sure to whom or to what you are responding, and in
many cases, your message turns out to incomprehensible without a quote. It
may seem apparent to you that you're replying to the message directly above
yours, but not everybiody keeps already-read messages (I don't, for example)
and not everybody sorts messages the same way you do.

Stan Brown

unread,
Mar 26, 2006, 6:19:29 PM3/26/06
to
[This followup was posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.customize and
a copy was sent to the cited author.]

Sat, 25 Mar 2006 20:52:21 +0100 from Vladimir Stefanovic
<anti...@po.sbb.co.yu>:


> Thank you for the detailed explanation.
>
> You answers were very useful, indeed.

Who is "you"? If it's me, you're welcome; but you got several
answers.

Please, in future show some context for what you're talking about.
When you write, remember that your readers will not know what you are
thinking.

(This doesn't mean quoting teh whole previous article; it means
quoting just enough to establish context. Please see
http://oakroadsystems.com/genl/unice.htm#quote for some more about
this.)

0 new messages